@aaronm@bookhistodons@medievodons how detailed do you want the descriptions? There’s a Constitution and ordo for the women’s house of st Catherine’s in Augsburg in this set, for example — or do you want formal titles? I can do a couple of German text IDs I the morning… #nuns#constitutions#OP#Augsburg
“The implication is that Anglo-Saxon elites had access to significant quantities of Byzantine silver, something that dramatically alters our view of how economically and politically connected they were.”
Includes a famous palimpsest, a multi-voice Mass, with former binding fragments in a second volume, some songs, a table for Paschal calculations and a volume from University of Würzburg.... and no more #Medieval#Medievodons@bookhistodons@medievodons
L'Institut de Recherche et d'Histoire des Textes (IRHT-CNRS) at Paris-Aubervilliers is hiring 8 positions for digital medievalists for the Biblissima project, in jobs from software development to processing of historical data, for contracts of 6 to 36 months. Application deadlines from 2 to 8 July 2024, with positions starting in September or October.
It's been a while since I've added anything to CoKL, but I got through another of the mini-Hours at #Houghton Library this week, 2020HEM-27. This was made c.1400 in Bruges. The calendar is somewhat sparse at 118 saints, but nearly flawless. Only two errors, and both are just shifted by a single day. An interesting detail is the flamboyant script to abbreviate the parts (Kalends, Ides, etc) of the Roman dating http://www.cokldb.org/p/v100/ms/867 #Medieval#Medievodons@medievodons@bookhistodons